- UID
- 254926
- 热情
- 58965
- 人气
- 60960
- 主题
- 337
- 帖子
- 57316
- 精华
- 2
- 积分
- 88905
- 分享
- 0
- 记录
- 0
- 相册
- 0
- 好友
- 0
- 日志
- 0
- 在线时间
- 11154 小时
- 注册时间
- 2010-9-11
- 阅读权限
- 30
- 最后登录
- 2016-7-3
    
升级   0% - UID
- 254926
- 热情
- 58965
- 人气
- 60960
- 主题
- 337
- 帖子
- 57316
- 精华
- 2
- 积分
- 88905
- 阅读权限
- 30
- 注册时间
- 2010-9-11
|
http://www.crownfibre.govt.nz/ul ... and/residental.aspx
Residental
Urban and suburban residential areas will get access to Ultra-Fast Broadband through a staged roll-out to 2019, with new developments in greenfields areas a high priority.
Many New Zealanders would like to access the Internet at higher speeds from the comfort of their own home. At the moment, most access the Internet using legacy copper networks installed over many decades, purchasing "DSL" (Digital Subscriber Line) services. A smaller proportion of users access the Internet over wireless networks, while a number of households purchase "HFC" (Hybrid Fibre Co-axial) services. Each of these technologies plays a valuable part in supporting New Zealanders' communications. However, most struggle to deliver the rapid speeds which some new applications require. In particular, a copper based "last mile" (between the exchange or cabinet and customers' premises) constrains speeds over 20 Mbps.
Optic fibre-based services are capable of delivering faster speeds than the technologies used by most New Zealanders. These services allow transmission over longer distances and at higher bandwidths (data speeds) than other forms of communications.
CFH has a mandate to provide at least 75 per cent of New Zealanders with access by 2019 to Internet services at speeds of at least 100 Mbps (Downstream) and 50 Mbps (Upstream), much faster than the average service in place today. Fibre is also capable of being upgraded easily to speeds of 10 Gigabits per second and beyond, without the need for further expensive street openings or disruption to the community.
A range of new applications and services may be enabled in the home as a result of Ultra-Fast Broadband, including:
Video conferencing (home-to-home).
IP TV and new advanced TV services such as 3D, Quad & Ultra High Definition.
Home Wide Area Network, allowing multiple homes (for example across an extended family) to easily store, access and share large amounts of information such as video or photos.
Cloud computing applications for game-playing, office applications, online backup, file syncing and so forth.
Tele-health applications in the home.
Education applications in the home.
Remote working solutions allowing employees to work from home will also be significantly enabled by Ultra-Fast Broadband, delivering a tangible productivity improvement across New Zealand. Of 7000 Broadband consumers surveyed across 6 countries by Ericsson, 50% stated that working from home increased their productivity. (Source: Ericsson Consumer Lab, High speed broadband usage, drivers and barriers study 2009.) |
|